doctor Type post Date February 27, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicineMetascience Tagged , artificial intelligence, California, chatbots, China, Elisabeth Bik, errors, Ethiopia, India, investigation, large language models, misconduct, mistakes, Nature (journal), Pakistan, physicians, Research, research integrity, research misconduct, researchers, Retraction Crisis, Saudi Arabia, universities China Leads the World in Retracted Science Papers Evolution News February 27, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine, Metascience 4 Seven of the Top Ten retraction hotspots are in China but India, Ethiopia, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia also make an appearance. Read More ›
hmsdiscovery_None_bb4912cc-1e4e-4468-ba40-9138d48c83e9 Type post Author Andrew McDiarmid Date November 20, 2023 CategoriesComputational SciencesIntelligent Design Tagged , Brian Miller, Conservation of Information, Darth Vader, death, Design Inference, education, father, Forensics, freedom, humans, ID the Future, intelligent design, investigation, Luke Skywalker, movie reference, movies, murder, natural causes, pattern, podcast, relationships, The Design Inference, William A. Dembski, Winston Ewert A New Design Inference for a New Generation Andrew McDiarmid November 20, 2023 Computational Sciences, Intelligent Design 3 Is there an empirical method to determine whether a system is the product of chance or design? Read More ›
2.21-iss058e016863_highres 2 Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date April 17, 2019 CategoriesFaith & Science Tagged , __k-review, cosmos, Darwin Devolves, Emily Kurlinski, experimentation, faith, foresight, human beings, ID the Future, intelligent design, investigation, Marcos Eberlin, Melissa Cain Travis, Michael Behe, Michael Keas, podcast, science, Science and the Mind of the Maker, Texas, Unbelievable Melissa Cain Travis: The Argument from the Existence of Science David Klinghoffer April 17, 2019 Faith & Science 2 Professor Travis is among the speakers at next month’s conference, co-sponsored by our Houston Chapter, Reasons 2019. Read More ›
Wansink Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date September 30, 2018 CategoriesScience Education Tagged , __k-review, academic misconduct, altruism, Associated Press, Cornell University, evolution, food, investigation, James Madison University, scientific method, STEM education, Washington Post Lessons from the Wansink Science Scandal Sarah Chaffee September 30, 2018 Science Education 5 Professor Alan Levinovitz asks: Science as "a big book of Important Truths"? Read More ›